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LibreOffice 3.6 Writer Guide - The Document Foundation Wiki

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Working with page styles<br />

Page styles control page properties (margins, page size, header and footers, among others).<br />

However, unlike paragraphs, which can have directly applied properties, pages only have a page<br />

style and no directly applied properties.<br />

Christian is a lawyer from California, USA. For his letters, the first page has his<br />

letterhead, and subsequent pages only identify the recipient, the date, and the<br />

page number. Christian does this using page styles. He also uses page styles to<br />

comply with the spacing requirements (such as margins) for legal briefs in<br />

California State courts.<br />

This section describes how to create a new page style, explains the meaning of some of the<br />

options in the Page style dialog box, and illustrates their usage.<br />

Creating a new page style<br />

Unlike other styles, page styles can be created or modified only by using the Styles and Formatting<br />

window. Open the Styles and Formatting window and click the Page Styles icon . Right-click<br />

anywhere in the main window and select New.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Page Style dialog box consists of the eight pages.<br />

Figure 245: <strong>The</strong> tabbed pages for the Page Style dialog box<br />

<strong>The</strong> Organizer page<br />

<strong>The</strong> Organizer page is described in “<strong>The</strong> Organizer page” on page 204.<br />

<strong>The</strong> next style property<br />

Use the Next style property to specify the style for the subsequent page style element. This<br />

property is particularly important for a page style, as the following example demonstrates.<br />

Setting up a title page<br />

Consider a common scenario: you want the document to have a title page that is different from the<br />

rest of the document:<br />

• It should not have a header or page number.<br />

• <strong>The</strong> left and right margins should be the same.<br />

For the title page, we can use the predefined First Page page style that comes with <strong>LibreOffice</strong>,<br />

and for the rest of the document, we can use the Default page style.<br />

Figure 246 shows the required flow of page styles. On the Organizer page of the Default page<br />

style, leave the Next Style property set to Default. On the Organizer page of the First Page style,<br />

make sure that the Next Style property is set to Default.<br />

222 <strong>LibreOffice</strong> <strong>3.6</strong> <strong>Writer</strong> <strong>Guide</strong>

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